Current:Home > FinanceA judge is vetoing a Georgia county’s bid to draw its own electoral districts, upholding state power -Wealth Evolution Experts
A judge is vetoing a Georgia county’s bid to draw its own electoral districts, upholding state power
View
Date:2025-04-12 15:08:34
ATLANTA (AP) — A Georgia judge is batting down an attempt by a local government to overrule state lawmakers and draw its own electoral districts, in a ruling that reinforces the supremacy of state government over local government
Cobb County Superior Court Judge Kellie Hill on Thursday ruled that the county can’t draw its own maps. Because candidates for two Cobb County Commission seats had already been nominated in primaries under the county-drawn maps, Hill ruled that the general election for those seats can’t go forward in November. Instead, Cobb County election officials must schedule a new primary and general election, probably in 2025.
The ruling in a lawsuit brought by prospective Republican county commission candidate Alicia Adams means residents in Georgia’s third-largest county will elect two county commissioners in districts mapped by the Republican-majority legislature, and not a map later drawn by the Democratic-majority Cobb County Commission.
“The court, having ruled the Home Rule Map unconstitutional in the companion appeal action finds that plaintiff has a clear legal right to seek qualification as a candidate for the Cobb County Commission, post 2, using the Legislative Map and, if qualified, to run in a special primary for that post,” Hill wrote in her decision.
The dispute goes back to Republican lawmakers’ decision to draw election district lines for multiple county commissions and school boards that was opposed by Democratic lawmakers representing Democratic-majority counties.
In most states, local governments are responsible for redrawing their own district lines once every 10 years, to adjust for population changes after U.S. Census results are released. But in Georgia, while local governments may propose maps, local lawmakers traditionally have to sign off.
If Cobb County had won the power to draw its own districts, many other counties could have followed. In 2022, Republicans used their majorities to override the wishes of local Democratic lawmakers to draw districts in not only Cobb, but in Fulton, Gwinnett, Augusta-Richmond and Athens-Clarke counties. Democrats decried the moves as a hostile takeover of local government.
But the Cobb County Commission followed up by asserting that under the county government’s constitutional home rule rights, counties could draw their own maps. In an earlier lawsuit, the state Supreme Court said the plaintiffs who filed the lawsuit didn’t have standing to sue because the outcome wasn’t going to personally affect them.
That’s not the case for Adams, who lives inside the District 2 drawn by lawmakers and filed to run for commission, but who was disqualified because she didn’t live inside the District 2 drawn by county commissioners. At least two people who sought to qualify as Democrats were turned away for the same reason.
The terms of current District 2 Commissioner Jerica Richardson and District 4 Commissioner Monique Sheffield expire at the end of 2024. Democrats had been displeased with the earlier map because it drew Richardson out of her district. Richardson later launched a failed Democratic primary bid for Congress, losing to U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath.
The Cobb County election board said Friday that it would not appeal.
“The Board of Elections has maintained a neutral position on the validity of the Home Rule Map from the very beginning of this dispute and does not foresee a need to appeal these orders,” the board said in a statement released by attorney Daniel White.
veryGood! (67)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- 10 years later, the 'worst anthem' singer is on a Star-Spangled redemption tour
- Rep. Maxwell Frost on Gen-Z politics and the price tag of power
- Banned Books: Maia Kobabe explores gender identity in 'Gender Queer'
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Harvey Weinstein found guilty on 3 of 7 charges in Los Angeles
- How Anitta, the 'Girl from Rio,' went global
- How Anitta, the 'Girl from Rio,' went global
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Author Maia Kobabe: Struggling kids told me my book helped them talk to parents
Ranking
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- East Palestine church hosts chemical exposure study in wake of train disaster
- The fantasia of Angelo Badalamenti, veil-piercing composer
- Bronny James in stable condition after suffering cardiac arrest at USC practice, spokesman says
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Lynette Hardaway, Diamond of pro-Trump duo 'Diamond and Silk,' has died at 51
- Three found dead at campsite were members of Colorado Springs family who planned to live ‘off grid’
- 2022 was a good year for Nikki Grimes, who just published her 103rd book
Recommendation
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
Banc of California to buy troubled PacWest Bancorp, which came close to failing earlier this year
Investigators dig up Long Island killings suspect Rex Heuermann's backyard with excavator
Sheryl Lee Ralph opens up about when her son was shot: 'I collapsed and dropped the phone'
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Triple-digit ocean temps in Florida could be a global record
We've got a complicated appreciation for 'Roald Dahl's Matilda The Musical'
Biden administration sues Texas over floating border barriers used to repel migrants